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Ceasefire in Lebanon Is Stopgap Until Trump Takes Over, Israelis Say

Joe Biden discusses the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire deal during a Nov. 26 Rose Garden speech. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
December 2, 2024

TEL AVIV, Israel—President Joe Biden and his senior foreign policy aides have hailed a ceasefire they brokered in Lebanon last week as a potential breakthrough for Middle East peace. But Israeli leaders just want to get through the final days of Biden's presidency so they can finish the war with Israel's genocidal enemies.

In the Rose Garden on Tuesday, Biden announced the 60-day truce between Israel and the Iran-backed Lebanese terrorist group Hezbollah which went into effect early Wednesday and has so far held. He said the deal "heralds a new start for Lebanon" and "brings us closer to realizing the affirmative agenda that I’ve been pushing forward during my entire presidency: a vision for the future of the Middle East where it’s at peace and prosperous and integrated across borders."

"I believe this agenda remains possible," Biden continued, vowing to use the final 54 days of his presidency to try to end Israel’s war in Gaza, normalize Israel-Saudi relations, and secure a "credible pathway for a Palestinian state."

According to current and former Israeli officials, however, Israel's government agreed to the ceasefire largely to appease and move on from the Biden administration. President-elect Donald Trump will be back in the White House when the 60-day deadline for troop withdrawals comes around, and they expect he will support a strong response to any violation of the deal as well as Israeli action against Hamas and Iran.

"It’s not for no reason that we insisted on 60 days," Ohad Tal, a member of Israel’s parliamentary defense committee from the governing Religious Zionism party, told the Washington Free Beacon.

The ceasefire agreement provides "zero" security benefits to Israel in Lebanon, Tal said, noting that the Lebanese Army and international peacekeepers have abjectly failed to enforce Resolution 1701 for the past 18 years. He said pressure from the Biden administration was the "main reason" Israel's leaders nonetheless got behind the deal. 

"It’s a bad deal," Tal said. "But it’s a bad deal that we had to sign under the circumstances, and that had everything to do with the current administration in America."

Hours before Biden trumpeted the ceasefire agreement at the White House, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended the deal to a skeptical public in starkly different terms. He described the truce as something like a tactical pause in Israel’s nearly 14-month war against Iran and its terrorist affiliates, including Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza. Netanyahu described the truce as a chance for Israel's military, composed mostly of reservists, to rest, rearm, and "focus on the Iranian threat" and "our sacred mission" to bring home the 101 hostages still held hostage in Gaza. He emphasized that his government would not hesitate to "renew the war," as it did following last November’s ceasefire in Gaza.

"The length of the ceasefire depends on what happens in Lebanon. If Hezbollah violates the agreement and tries to arm itself, we will attack," Netanyahu said. "Believe in our determination, believe in our path, in our commitment to victory."

Netanyahu also suggested that pressure from the Biden administration had forced Israel’s hand. 

"I say it openly, it is no secret that there have been big delays in weapons and munitions deliveries," he said, echoing explicit criticisms he made of the Biden administration in a speech to lawmakers last month. "These delays will be resolved soon. We will receive supplies of advanced weaponry that will keep our soldiers safe and give us more strike force to complete our mission."

In interviews with the Free Beacon, two current and three former Israeli officials confirmed Hebrew media reports that the Biden administration has slowed weapons deliveries to Israel, including the recent hold up of a shipment of 139 armored bulldozers on which soldiers rely to clear explosives and terrorist hideouts in Lebanon and Gaza.

Hours after the start of the ceasefire on Wednesday, U.S. officials leaked that Biden was advancing a $680 million weapons package to Israel. U.S. officials anonymously said the package was unconnected to the Israeli government's cooperation with the truce. The Biden administration has long denied withholding weapons from Israel, aside from one shipment of 2,000 pound bombs that Biden has publicly suspended since March. 

Another factor in Israeli leader's approval of the ceasefire agreement was fear that the Biden administration would otherwise facilitate a U.N. Security Council resolution harmful to Israel, according to the current and former officials. Tal said Israel's government had learned "the State Department was already working to arrange a resolution against Israel in the Security Council."

Israel’s Channel 14 news reported late last month that Netanyahu privately warned critics of the ceasefire there was a "real danger" Biden would punish Israel at the U.N. Security Council for not backing the deal. Netanyahu reportedly said it was better to "postpone the end" of the war by two months with an "American commitment to strike [Hezbollah] for any violation" than to have the Security Council force an end to the war. 

Amir Avivi, a former senior Israeli military official who has advised Israel’s senior leadership throughout the war, told the Free Beacon that Netanyahu fears a repeat of the final weeks of Barack Obama’s presidency, during which the United States abstained from a U.N. National Security Council resolution that rejected any Israeli presence in the "occupied Palestinian territory" of the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

"I heard Netanyahu speak many times about how traumatic and complicated it was to deal with Obama’s decision," Avivi said. "I think one of Netanyahu’s top priorities right now is to make sure the current U.S. administration ends without that kind of drama. So, Netanyahu negotiated this temporary ceasefire, and if it works, OK, and if not, then there will be a change of administration, and Israel will be in a position to decide what to do."

Senior Israeli and U.S. officials told reporters in background briefings last week that the Biden administration did not explicitly threaten to sanction Israel in relation to the ceasefire talks. But the officials did not deny that such a threat existed.

In an email exchange, a State Department spokeswoman dodged questions from the Free Beacon on the subject, saying only: "Our goal was to reach an enduring diplomatic resolution that will enable civilians to safely return to their homes on both sides of the Blue Line. We achieved that with the close (and ongoing) communication of our Israeli and Lebanese counterparts."

The Prime Minister's Office and the White House declined to comment.

Under the ceasefire agreement, Israeli troops have 60 days to withdraw from southern Lebanon, where they have been carrying out operations for two months to destroy Hezbollah infrastructure near the border. Meanwhile, the Lebanese Army, with U.S. and French support, must move into the area to enforce U.N. Resolution 1701, which bars Hezbollah from keeping arms and terrorist infrastructure south of the Litani River. The Biden administration separately guaranteed Israel's right to respond to violations of the deal. 

Kobi Michael, a former senior Israeli military intelligence official, told the Free Beacon that Israel's leaders expect they will not be required to complete the withdrawal from Lebanon. He said "the working assumption" in Jerusalem is that Hezbollah will try to rearm, the Lebanese government will fail to prevent the terrorist group from doing so, and Trump will "agreed with us that the ceasefire has been violated and we must be free to continue operating in Lebanon."

A senior U.S. official told reporters on Tuesday that Netanyahu initiated the successful final push for a ceasefire in Lebanon as a "gift" to Trump, confirming a report last month by the Washington Post. But the current and former Israeli officials downplayed talk that Netanyahu feels pressure to end the war before Trump takes office on Jan. 20. They agreed that the truce is better understood as part of an Israeli effort to set the stage for an airstrike on Iran's nuclear weapons program, with U.S. backing or ideally participation.

Avivi said Israel has mostly disabled Iran's "proxies and air defenses" during the war and has lately ramped up domestic weapons production and other preparations to deal a devastating blow to the Islamic Republic.

"Israel’s challenge is to convince President Trump that we are handing him Iran on a silver platter," Avivi added, before directly addressing the incoming Trump administration. "All the hard work is done. Just bring the strategic bombers, and let’s get it over with. It’s one airstrike."